Oil gas prices won't immediately return to normal even if Iran war ends EU warns

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Nicosia, Mar 31 (AP) Skyrocketing oil and gas prices in Europe as a result of the ongoing Iran war won't return to normal levels any time soon, even if peace is declared tomorrow, the European Union's energy commissioner warned Tuesday.
     Commissioner Dan Jorgensen said although there are no immediate oil and gas supply shortages in the 27-member bloc, there's pressure on diesel and jet fuel supply as well as “increasing constraints” in global gas markets that are resulting in higher electricity prices.
     “What I find extremely important is to state as clearly as I can, that even if that peace is here tomorrow, still we will not go back to normal in a foreseeable future,” Jorgensen told a news conference after a meeting of EU energy ministers.
     He said the EU's executive arm is preparing a string of measures designed to help families and businesses weather the huge spike in oil prices that have resulted in about a 70 per cent price hike for gas and 60 per cent for oil in Europe.
     Since the start of the war, the EU's bill for imported fossil fuels has jumped by 14 billion euros, according to Jorgensen.
     Closely coordinated action between all EU members is necessary to “avoid fragmented national responses and disruptive signals to the markets,” he said.
     The “toolbox” of measures now in the works will be unveiled “quite soon” and will include ways to make it easier for states to decouple gas prices from electricity prices, the commissioner said.
     He added that a tax cut on electricity, as suggested by Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is also being weighed.
     Jorgensen said although he doesn't foresee a repeat of the 2022 natural gas crisis where companies reaped huge profits from a massive gas price hike, a one-time “windfall tax” on such companies “is a possibility.”
     There are now “good opportunities” for member states to financially support vulnerable groups or industries now under “extraordinary stress” and that the Commission would make “these possibilities even simpler and wider,” said Jorgensen.
     Jorgensen also encouraged EU members to consider the International Energy Agency's 10-point plan which includes work from home, reduced highway speeds, encouraging public transport and increasing car sharing.
     He said the EU stands by its ban on Russian gas purchases, which is meant to reduce dependence on Russian gas and choke off funding for Russia's war in Ukraine.
     Reliance on Russian gas dropped from 45 per cent before the war to 10 per cent now and will be reduced to zero once imports from other suppliers ramp up, especially from the US.
     The EU is looking at new energy sources from Azerbaijan, Algeria and Canada as well as smaller producers around the world.
     The commissioner warned the EU should never “repeat the mistakes of the past allowing Putin to weaponise energy against us and blackmail member states.”
     He added that “it would be totally unacceptable” for the EU to continue buying energy that would “indirectly help finance the terrible war that Putin is conducting in Ukraine.” (AP) GRS
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(This story has not been edited by THE WEEK and is auto-generated from PTI)